On September 27th, 2014, my mom, my eldest son, and I will be participating in the Out of the Darkness suicide prevention walk. We are raising funds to help in awareness and prevention of suicide. Which is where you, my wonderful readers, come in. Yes, I am asking for donations. Any donation, no matter how big or small, is greatly appreciated. To donate, please click here.
July 4th, 2010, my dad started having seizures. He was eventually diagnosed with epilepsy and put on many medications. The doctor was hesitant to take his license for a long time. Unfortunately that also meant she wasn't willing to help him get disability. Over the years, the lack of work, the medication, the depression, and everything else became too much for him. One day in October, he was driving to do a job, blacked out, and crashed his truck. Thankfully he survived with nothing more than a scratch on the leg. Or so it seemed. I believe that crash did more than we realized. In November, I moved myself and my 2 boys to the town he lives in so we could be near him. It was also in November that he told me that he was having trouble remembering things. Simple things. Things he had known for years. He needed a map to get around the small town he had lived and worked in for years. He was a self-employed plumber, so he knew the streets of this town backward and forward. Suddenly he needed a map to get around. He was also diagnosed with early-onset dementia, because of the head injuries and epilepsy. He wasn't able to drive anymore. He had to have people drive him to jobs. That was a massive blow to a man who was always self-sufficient and able to provide for his family. Suddenly he couldn't. And on top of that, the government said he couldn't get any help from them. He didn't want to be a burden to anyone, and the depression took hold.
On Monday, Dec. 16th, he and my mom went to the doctor for a routine MRI. He needed to be sedated for the MRI, but the technicians were not informed of this. So they had to reschedule.
When they got home that afternoon, my dad decided to go for a walk. My mom had no idea that he had taken the gun from the nightstand. He was gone for hours, which wasn't unusual for him. He often took long walks by the river to think. The river was one of his favorite places.
I knew that my dad had the MRI that day, so that night I texted my mom to find out how things went. She said she would talk to me about it tomorrow. So I figured that my dad had 'chickened out' and decided not to do it. If only it were that simple.
December 17, 2013 started out as any normal day. My son woke me up about 7. We got up, made coffee, and started our day. It was a cheerful day. It was my nephew's 15th birthday and I sang Happy Birthday to him(though he couldn't hear since he lives 3000 miles away). Little did we know that it would soon end.
I waited that morning for my mom to call me and tell me how the MRI went. I never got the call. Instead I got a knock on the door. She opened the door and said "hi, I have people with me." Those people were Pastor H and his wife. They walked in and smiled and said hi and asked mom how the MRI went. She woke up my 12 year old and told us to sit on the couch. I could tell she had been crying and that something was seriously wrong. My first thought went to my 83 year old grandpa who also lived with them. I'll never forget my mom saying "honey, your dad shot himself." I screamed "NO" and asked her if she was joking. Of course she wasn't. She would never joke about something like that. I immediateley buried my head in her lap and cried. I didn't get to say good-bye. I didn't get to give him one last hug and tell him that I loved him. I didn't get to thank him for being such a wonderful daddy to me, and an amazing grandpa to my kids. My just-turned 4 year old buried his head in the couch and kept saying "this is a horrible day. This is a very, very bad day!". My then-11.5 year old cried and snuggled up next to my mom. I remember the 4 us snuggling on the couch together, crying and saying "it's not fair! It's not fair!!!!". 6 months later and we're still saying that. It's not fair. And it sucks.
After a while, Pastor H and his wife left. My 11 yr old sat on the couch, not sure what to do. I went and set up my 4 year old with a project. I informed people on Facebook. My mom made phone calls. Those are some horrible phone calls to make. How do you call people and tell them someone they love has just shot themselves? The Sheriff in town, whom we know, called the local Suicide Prevention group and they came up to talk to us. They gave us some information and made sure we were okay. They made sure to tell us that there was nothing we could have done. Quite honestly, it did little to reassure us that day. We were all so numb. We finally had to go up to my parents house because family members were arriving to be with us. Walking into that house and seeing my dads empty recliner was horrible. I remember curling up in and smelling it because it smelled like him. I wanted to yell at everyone not to sit in it.
That day was a very, very long day. The weather was beautiful, which at one point prompted one of my aunts to say "it's a nice day." To which my 4 year old again replied "NO, it's not! It's a bad day! A very, very, very bad day!!". Out of the mouth of babes, right? It was, indeed, a very, very, very bad day. We spent the day talking to people, but I have no idea who. Family members came over and gave us hugs and condolences. I'm not completely sure who. It's kind of a blur. The rest of the week was spent trying not to lose our minds, planning my dads memorial service, and visiting with family. My sister, brother-in-law and their 3 kids flew into town a few days later. We cried together and made a wonderful memorial video for our dad. He was 3 months shy of 63 years old when he died.
The last 6 months have been a blur of grief and moving and craziness. I can't believe it's been 6 months. I can't believe my daddy is gone. He was my daddy. My fishing partner. The man who taught me about plumbing and how to cast a fishing pole. He was the man who smiled so proudly each time he held his grandchildren for the first time. Or any time, really. He was the man who everyone in town loved and admired. He was the man that you could look up to to be a good role model.
I know my daddy would never, ever, ever purposely hurt us if he had been in his right mind. Never, in a million years, would he do anything to hurt us. That is how I know that the illness he had completely taken over and he just didn't want to hurt anymore. He was in pain all the time, physically and mentally. He wanted to be done with it. He wanted to go home. He wanted healing. And dying was the only way to get it. I know that my dad is in heaven, and he is partying with Jesus, and his mom, and his dad, and his step-dad, and his grand babies that didn't make it to earth, and with his brother, and with my grandpa, who joined him in heaven just 6 short weeks later.
But that doesn't make us miss him any less. I miss him constantly. I want to give him a hug. I want to feel his arms around me as he kisses my head and says "love you, Punkin'." I want to see him playing with his grandsons. I just want HIM.
I don't know how to end this, so I'm just going to leave you with this video that we made for his memorial service:
We hear this all the time. "It take a village to raise a child". For the most part, I will say, yes, it does. It takes loving people to support the parents and help out when they can. Some people have apparently taken this to mean that it is okay for a stranger to discipline a child that they don't know. That is false. It is never, I repeat never, okay to discipline a strangers child. If a child is being noisy, talk to the parents. If a child is doing something you find unacceptable, talk to the parents. It is their right, not yours, to tell the child to be quiet, or to stop doing the thing that is unacceptable. There are few exceptions: If a child is running into the street, it is acceptable to gently stop the child and keep him safe.
So, does this mean a person shouldn't help out a mom or dad in the grocery store? It does not mean that at all. That is where the village comes in. To support the parents. Instead of telling the child to be quiet, play with the child. Entertain the child so the parent can do what he/she needs done.
Example: You are in line at the grocery store, and your 2 year old is being, well, 2. Wanting everything, screaming, the whole works. Instead of scowling at the parent for "not controlling her child", a better choice would be to help. Talk to the child. Try to make him laugh. Entertain him. Make funny faces. Offer to help the mom or dad with the groceries so she can tend to the screaming child. Be creative. Just don't judge. Don't scowl. Don't be mean. The parent is doing the best he/she can, and smiles and support go a long way in making life better.
This just came to my mind. I was going to make it a facebook rant, but decided that blogging would be more productive.
I am the mom! Me! I am the one that makes the decisions. You can give me all the advice you want. You can be horrified and appalled that my child is still using a bottle, or that he's not potty trained, or that my children have a TV and a blu-ray player(with WiFi) in their room. But guess what, at the end of the day, I'm the mom. I know my kids are fine. I do not feel guilty about my decisions.
So, go ahead. Be appalled. Give your unasked for advice. I'll continue on parenting the way I am, knowing that my kids are doing just fine.
Right? The man is awesome. Star Trek wouldn't be the same without Captain Jean Luc Picard, played by the amazing, the awesome, the wonderful Patrick Stewart. Well, the world is a becoming a better place because of him too. Patrick Stewart is an advocate for Violence Against Women. He is extremely vocal about stopping, and preventing violence against women. Not just physical violence, but the kind not many people are aware of. The emotional/verbal/sexual abuse that is often hidden in homes so well.
What is abuse? Below I linked to a blog that was written regarding how the church covers up abuse(often blaming the victim) and how to deal with it. There is also some beautiful videos of Patrick Steward talking about violence against women.
Here is how the website defines abuse on its home page.
Abuse is fundamentally a mentality. It is a mindset of entitlement. The abuser sees himself as entitled. He is the center of the world, and he demands that his victim make him the center of her world. His goal is power and control over others. For him, power and control are his natural right, and he feels quite justified in using whatever means are necessary to obtain that power and control. The abuser is not hampered in these efforts by the pangs of a healthy conscience and indeed often lacks a conscience.
While this mentality of power and control often expresses itself in various forms of physical abuse, it just as frequently employs tactics of verbal, emotional, financial, social, sexual and spiritual abuse. Thus, an abuser may never actually lay a hand on his wife and yet be very actively terrorizing her in incredibly damaging ways.
Abuse in any of its forms destroys the victim's person. Abuse, in the end, is murder.
I encourage everyone to read the blog I linked to and especially watch those videos of Patrick Stewart..
I hope everyone had a wonderful 4th of July. I know I sure did, despite the intense heat and exhausted 3.5 year old. It was 109 degrees at 7:30 last night. Thankfully by the time the fireworks started at 9:45, it had cooled off quite a bit.
The whole day was great. My mom left her house about 9:30 and arrived at ours at about 4. While she was traveling, the kids and I went to a friends house for a BBQ and some fun. We spent a couple of hours enjoying water balloon fights, squirt gun fights, good food and wonderful company. Then my mom arrived in town and we headed home. Where we hung out, played in the sprinklers, and BBQ'd the BEST steak and corn-on-the-cob. Best ever, if I do say so myself.
At 8:00 we headed over to a local park to watch the fireworks from a distance. We realized that we arrived super early, so we went to Dutch Bros. for smoothies and coffee. When we got back to the park, we found a perfect spot to sit. We tossed down our blankets and chilled out while waiting to watching the fireworks. That was most definitely the best part of the evening. My mom, my children and me sitting on a blanket in a park playing and laughing and having more fun than we have had in a long time. We sat there and watched Samuel run around in circles around the blanket singing a song about how his shirt glowed in the dark. We took tons of pictures, some of which are below. By the time the fireworks actually started, it was way past Samuel's bedtime and he was more than ready to go home and sleep. But I held him and convinced him we would go home soon. He wasn't interested in watching the fireworks, so he lay in my arms as I watched them and rocked him. Cias turned some music on my phone and was listening to it as he sat with Mima and watched the fireworks.
When the fireworks were over, we headed back to the truck. As we walked up, Mima told Samuel to turn on the truck lights. I told him to use his Jedi powers to turn the lights on. So he put his hands up, wiggled his fingers, and the truck headlights magically came on! He is now convinced he has Jedi powers and can always turn on the truck lights. I really wish I had power locks in my car so I could that with him too. He was so excited.
I wish I could think of the words to express how wonderful last night was. I hope the pictures can express them instead.
It's been a year since the split, and people are asking me how I am doing. My answer? GREAT! And yes, that is the truth. I have my moments where I want to throw in towel and call quits. Hey, who doesn't? That's pretty normal. But I'm healing, and I'm learning that I'm not crazy. It's amazing! I'm not the crazy one!! I never was!!! It's mind-blowing. I just finished reading Why Does He Do That? by Lundy Bancroft and it confirmed that I'm not crazy. I'm not stupid, I'm not crazy, I'm not lazy, I'm not a horrible person. I've just spent years either being told I was, or being made to feel like I was.
So now when I'm asked how I am doing, I can say GREAT. Yeah, we're broke, we struggle with things that I hate struggling with, but really, life is great. I can say that Life's been good to me so far(Thanks Joe Walsh). :) I haven't started dating, but I do have some prospects. I'm making some cuts to improve the financial situation and make things better. Things are certainly looking up for all of us.